TABLE OF CONTENTS - icm2018sf.org · iv General Conference Information General Conference...
Transcript of TABLE OF CONTENTS - icm2018sf.org · iv General Conference Information General Conference...
TABLE OF CONTENTS
General Conference Information ....................ii
Exhibitors, Sponsors and Supporters ..........xii
Program-at-a-Glance ...................................xx
Monday ...........................................................1
Tuesday .........................................................74
Wednesday..................................................152
Thursday .....................................................188
Friday ..........................................................269
Index ...........................................................320
ii General Conference Information General Conference Information iii
GENERAL CONFERENCE INFORMATION
SCOPE OF THE CONFERENCE
The 21st International Conference on Magnetism (ICM2018) is sponsored jointly by the International Union of Pure and Applied Physics (IUPAP), AIP Publishing, and the IEEE Magnetics Society in cooperation with the American Physical Society. ICM2018 will be run concurrently with the International Conference on Strongly Correlated Electron Systems (SCES2018). ICM2018 is a major international conference series, held every three years, most recently in Barcelona, Busan, Karlsruhe, and Kyoto, and covers both fun-damental and applied research related to magnetism. The technical program will include plenary lectures, invited and contributed oral presentations, and poster sessions, with about 1800 presentations overall. This Conference provides an outstanding opportunity for worldwide participants to share their research with the largest and broadest collection of magnetism researchers assembled in one place, and to learn about the latest results.
SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA
Welcome to San Francisco, the City by the Bay! This cool northern California city truly has it all. Nightlife, arts and culture, world-class dining and shopping, historic cable cars to take you around the city, unique neighborhoods to explore, including the Mission District, Chinatown, the Presidio, Haight-Ashbury, North Beach, Nob Hill and Union Square, and a seemingly endless list of attractions to visit in and around the Bay Area. Find out more at www.sftravel.com.
All sessions will be held at the Moscone Center South, located in the urban heart of San Francisco’s downtown district and just a quick walk from the San Francisco Marriott Marquis, the Conference Hotel. A block of discounted hotel rooms has been reserved at the Marriott for $224/night, with a limited umber of student rate rooms available as well. Please support our efforts to keep registration fees low by booking your room here. Discounted rates are available until June 15, 2018 at www.icm2018sf.org under “Travel Guide/ Hotel Information”.
SPECIAL CONFERENCE SESSIONS
Pre-Conference Tutorials
Pre-registration is NOT required for these events.
Computational Micromagnetics with JOOMMF
Sunday, July 15 1:30 pm - 5:00 pm Room 307/308, Level Three
Speakers: Marijan Beg, European XFEL GmbH
This workshop will provide a brief introduction to computational micromagnetics. We will introduce and teach the use of a Python interface to drive the OOMMF simulation package. At the beginning, we will provide a lecture style introduction, which is followed by practical exercises where attendees will have an opportunity to carry out small micromagnetic calculations, modify given examples and ask more specific questions.
Entrepreneurship Tutorial—From Concepts to Products: Pathways to Success
Sunday, July 15 1:30 pm - 3:00 pm Room 104, Lobby Level
Supported in part by:
Moderator: Tom Coughlin, Coughlin Associates
Speakers: Han Jin, Lucid VR Andrew Kent, Spin Transfer Technologies
Here in Silicon Valley, starting new companies is a way of life. Many software projects require minimal capital investments, but that is often not the case with hardware. So, how do you get started if you have an idea for a hardware product and how do you fund your venture and find customers? Learn from our panelists how they tackled the challenges of taking hardware products to market and what they learned along the way.
Resume Writing Tutorial—Presenting Your Best Self to Hiring Managers in Industry, Government and Academia
Sunday, July 15 3:30 pm - 5:00 pm Room 104, Lobby Level
Speakers: Liesl Folks, University of Buffalo Tom Thomson, University of Manchester
If you’d like a job at some point, it is almost a certainty that you will need to write a resume or curriculum vitae that will make a compelling case for you to be interviewed. Learn from our panelists what works and what mistakes they regularly see on resumes.
Opening Session
Monday, July 16 8:00 am - 8:30 am Esplanade Ballroom, Upper Mezzanine Level
Chair: Kai Liu, University of California, Davis and Georgetown University
Welcome: Allan MacDonald, General Chair, ICM2018 University of Texas at Austin
Presentation of the 2018 IUPAP Magnetism Award and Néel Medal:
Presented by: Burkard Hillebrands, Chair, IUPAP C9 Commission, Technische Universität Kaiserslautern
Dr. Samuel D. Bader, Argonne National Laboratory
Prof. Ramamoorthy Ramesh, University of California, Berkeley
Prof. Kang L. Wang, University of California, Los Angeles
Presentation of the 2018 IUPAP Young Scientist Prize in Magnetism:
2016: Wei Han, Peking University2017: Luqiao Liu, Massachusetts Institute of Technology2018: Shinichiro Seki, RIKEN
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Prize Talks
Monday, July 16 8:30 am - 10:00 am Esplanade Ballroom, Upper Mezzanine Level
Chair: Burkard Hillebrands, Chair, IUPAP C9 Commission, Technische Universität Kaiserslautern
Dr. Samuel D. Bader, Argonne National Laboratory
“For outstanding and sustained experimental contributions to the field of magnetic surfaces, films, and nanostructures”.
AA-01 The Marriage of Ferromagnetism and Superconductivity: A New Twist.
Prof. Ramamoorthy Ramesh, University of California, Berkeley
“For groundbreaking discoveries in novel multiferroic and magnetoelectric materials and their applications in future technologies”.
AA-02 Electric Field Control of Magnetism
Prof. Kang L. Wang, University of California, Los Angeles
“For the discovery of chiral Majorana fermions and outstanding contributions to topological spintronics”.
AA-03 Topology in Spintronics: Majorana, etc.
Symposia
1:30 pm - 3:00 pmEsplanade 157, Upper Mezzanine Level
Monday D1 Spin Currents and Magnonic Condensates in Magnetic Insulator
Chair: Oksana Chubykalo-Fesenko, Instituto de Ciencia de Materiales de Madrid
Tuesday J1 Computing with Spintronic Devices
Chair: Chih-Huang Lai, National Tsing Hua University
Thursday S1 New Routes and Materials Toward Quantum Criticality
Chair: Stephen Julian, University of Toronto
Friday Y1 Emerging Phenomena in Van der Waals Magnets
Chair: Steven May, Drexel University
Plenary Sessions
11:30 am - 12:30 pmEsplanade Ballroom, Upper Mezzanine Level
Tuesday I1-01 Spin-Orbit Torques: Discoveries, Advances and Possibilities
Chair: Allan MacDonald, University of Texas at Austin
Speaker: Robert Buhrman, Cornell University
Wednesday O1-01 Antiferromagnetic Spintronics
Chair: Laura Heyderman, Paul Scherrer Institute
Speaker: Tomas Jungwirth, Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic
Thursday R1-01 Topological Weyl Magnets: From Multipole to Room Temperature Functions
Chair: Leon Balents, University of California at Santa Barbara
Speaker: Satoru Nakatsuji, The University of Tokyo
Friday X1-01 Hidden Magnetic Order in Multiferroics and Superconductors
Chair: Mark Stiles, National Institute of Standards and Technology
Speaker: Nicola Spaldin, ETH Zurich
Lunch with the Experts
Tuesday, July 17 and Thursday, July 1912:30 pm - 1:30 pmRotunda, Upper Mezzanine Level
Students and post-doctoral researchers who have registered in advance for this event will enjoy an intimate lunch and discussion with their selected expert. This event will be held on Tuesday and Thursday in the Rotunda on the Mezzanine Level of the Moscone Center. Lunch will be served. You must register in advance to at-tend this event as space is extremely limited.
Experts: Tuesday James Analytis, University of California at Berkeley Wei Han, Peking University Jean Anne Incorvia, University of Texas at Austin Natalia Perkins, University of Minnesota
Thursday Paulo Freitas, International Iberian Nanotechnology Laboratory Christian Ruegg, Paul Scherrer Institut and the University of Geneva Suchitra Sebastian, Cambridge University Yayoi Takamura, University of California at Davis Roser Valenti, University of Frankfurt Stephen Wilson, University of California at Santa Barbara
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Student Presentation Award Session and Networking Reception
Thursday, July 196:30 pm - 8:30 pmEsplanade 160 and Rotunda, Upper Mezzanine Level
Supported by:
Attendees are invited to attend a special session featuring the final-ists for the Best Student Presentation Award, sponsored by Evico Magnetics. This competition recognizes and encourages excellence in graduate studies in the field of magnetism. There will be a US $1000 one-year fellowship for the winner and US $250 one-year fellowships for the remaining finalists. Each finalist will give a 10-minute talk, which will be evaluated by a panel of judges.
Immediately following this session, there will be a networking re-ception with light refreshments, and the winner of the Best Student Presentation Award will be announced at 8:00 pm. Don’t forget to come support the students!
Co-Chair: Alexander Grutter, National Institute of Standards and Technology
Co-Chair: Julia Mundy, Harvard University
Finalists:
Jiarui Li, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Y8-04 Imaging Scale-invariant Magnetic Textures in a Strongly Correlated Oxide
Alejandro Ruiz, University of California at Berkeley
B14-06 Hidden Ferromagnetism in the Kitaev Honeycomb Iridates
Lourdes Marcano Prieto, Universidad del País Vasco
L1-11 On the Magnetic Anisotropy of Co-doped Magnetosome Chains
Michael Harder, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg
Q2-08 Level Attraction and Synchronization in Hybridized Magnon-Photon Systems
Libor Šmejkal, Johannes Gutenberg University
G6-01 Classification of Topological Antiferromagnets for Spintronics
Closing Session
Friday, July 205:00 pm - 5:30 pmEsplanade 152, Upper Mezzanine Level
Chair: Allan MacDonald, General Chair, ICM2018 University of Texas at Austin
SPECIAL CONFERENCE EVENTS
Welcome Reception—Neighborhoods of San Francisco
Sunday, July 155:00 pm - 6:30 pmMoscone Center South Lobby
Conference attendees are invited to attend a Welcome Reception, sponsored by the IEEE Magnetics Society. This reception will be held immediately following the Tutorial Sessions at the Moscone Center in beautiful downtown San Francisco. The Moscone Center is located just a five-minute walk from the San Francisco Marriott through the blooming Yerba Buena Gardens. You will enjoy an authentic taste of the city of San Francisco, with samplings from its most famous neighborhoods such as North Beach, Chinatown and Ghirardelli Square. And of course, there will be a fantastic selection of California wines and local beers on tap. Don’t miss this kickoff event—it’s a great way to start your week at ICM2018.
Women in Magnetism Networking Event
Monday, July 166:30 pm - 8:00 pmRotunda, Upper Mezzanine Level
Expand your professional network! Don’t miss the Women in Magnetism Networking Event, sponsored by the IEEE Magnetics Society. This is an opportunity to become acquainted with women in the profession and to discuss a range of topics including leader-ship, work-life balance, and professional development. All graduate students, researchers and retirees are encouraged to attend.
Banquet at the Exploratorium
Tuesday, July 17 7:00 pm - 10:00 pm Exploratorium at Pier 15www.exploratorium.edu
ICM2018 attendees and their guests are invited to attend a banquet event at the famed Exploratorium at Pier 15. This is an event not to be missed! You will have private access to all of the amazing hands-on exhibits in the Bechtel Central Gallery of the museum, heralded as an ongoing exploration of science, art and human perception. Entertainment will be provided by the daring aerialists from Earth Circus Productions. Don’t miss this exciting night on Pier 15!
TICKET REQUIRED. This event is NOT included in your Conference registration or Companion Ticket. You must purchase a ticket to attend. Tickets are $100 each, and $60 for students.
Magnetism as Art Showcase
ICM2018 will host a Magnetism as Art Showcase to highlight the beauty of magnetism and magnetic materials. Selected submissions will be displayed at the Conference, and all submissions will be posted to the Conference Facebook Page. Prizes will be awarded by a panel of judges as well as by popular vote. The winners will be recognized at the Student Presentation Award Session on Thursday evening. Don’t forget to take a look at the selected submissions on display and vote for your favorite! Submit your ballot by 12:30 pm on Thursday, July 19 for the Peoples’ Choice Award.
viii General Conference Information General Conference Information ix
Bierstuben
Join us Monday, Tuesday, and Thursday evenings from 5:00 pm - 6:30 pm in the Exhibit Hall for a taste of the best local beers as you network among the poster sessions and exhibits.
Coffee and Tea
Complimentary coffee and tea service will be available daily in the Moscone South Lobby and also in the Exhibit Hall.
REGISTRATION
The Registration Desk, located in the Moscone South Lobby, will be open during the following hours:
Sunday ................................................ 12:00 pm - 6:30 pm Monday ..................................................7:00 am - 6:30 pmTuesday ..................................................7:00 am - 6:30 pmWednesday ...........................................8:00 am - 12:30 pmThursday ................................................8:00 am - 6:30 pmFriday .....................................................8:00 am - 3:30 pm
Onsite Registration Rates:Full ..................................................................... $830 USDStudent ............................................................... $395 USDCompanion Ticket* ........................................... $225 USD
*Companion Tickets include access to the Welcome Reception, daily coffee, breaks, and Bierstuben at the Moscone Center. Companion Tickets DO NOT include access to the Banquet at the Exploratorium. Those tickets must be purchased separately. Banquet Tickets are $100 each, and $60 for students.
CAMERA, CELL PHONE AND VIDEO RECORDING POLICIES
By you: Recording (audio, video, still photography, etc.) of sessions is strictly prohibited whether intended for distribution, publication, copyright, or personal use. Attendees violating this policy may be asked to leave the session.
Of you: By registering for this meeting, all attendees acknowledge that they may be photographed by the ICM2018 personnel while at events, and that those photos may be used for promotional purposes, in ICM2018 publications and websites, and on social media sites.
SESSION CHAIRS
Poster and Oral Session Chairs should attend the Session Chair Breakfast at 7:15 am on the day of their session in Esplanade 151 on the Upper Mezzanine Level. Timer slides will be pre-loaded onto the session laptops in each oral session room, however, Session Chairs should bring their laptop as well to be used as a backup for presentations if needed.
SPEAKER REHEARSAL ROOM
Presenters may use the Speaker Rehearsal Room in Room 312 on Level 3 to practice their presentations with the provided audiovi-sual equipment (LCD projector and screen). This room is available Sunday at 1:00 pm until Friday at 1:00 pm.
ORAL SESSIONS
Ten simultaneous oral sessions will be held Monday through Friday.
Speakers must bring their presentation on their own laptop computer. If you cannot bring your laptop with you for any reason, you should alert your Session Chair and arrange to share your pre-sentation by email.
In each session room there will be a multi-port switchbox so that speakers can connect their laptop during the question period of the previous speaker. Each speaker will be responsible for promptly connecting to the projector and switching to the correct input port. The presentation timer will begin immediately after the intro-duction by the Session Chair. No extra time will be given in the event of technical difficulties as session timing must be strictly maintained. Speakers are strongly encouraged to test their laptop connections and screen resolution settings in the Speaker Rehearsal Room prior to the start of the session.
If audiovisual assistance is needed during an oral session, Ses-sion Chairs should contact the audiovisual technician located in the hallway outside their session rooms. Contact information for technicians will also be available on the Session Chair’s table at the front of the room.
POSTER SESSIONS
Poster sessions will be held Monday through Friday in the San Francisco Ballroom.
Poster presenters should set up their materials at least 30 minutes before their session starts and must be present at their poster for the duration of the session. Presenters must remove all of their materi-als promptly at the end of their session. Any poster materials not removed will be discarded.
BEST POSTER PRESENTATION AWARD
Supported by:
All posters that meet the requirements and guidelines described on the Conference website are eligible for this award. It is required that the presenting author be registered for the Conference and be present for the duration of the poster session to present details and answer questions. Nominations will be made by the Poster Session Chairs. Selections will be based on the level of the research, quality of the poster, and clarity of the presentation. The award will be given at the end of each poster session. The winning presenters will be given a commemorative prize and certificate. A ribbon will also be attached to the winning posters which will be prominently displayed for the remainder of the Conference.
PUBLICATIONS
The Conference papers will be published as special issues of AIP Advances in late 2018 and IEEE Transactions on Magnetics (TMAG) in February 2019. Entire sessions will be assigned to one of these journals by the Publication co-chairs. Invited papers will be published in the Journal to which their session is assigned by the publication co-chairs.
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AIP Advances is a peer-reviewed, fully open access, multidisci-plinary journal covering all areas of the physical sciences (experi-mental, theoretical, and applied). AIP Advances’ inclusive scope and publication standards make it an excellent outlet for scientists across the physical sciences. To learn more about the journal, visit aipadvances.aip.org. All AIP Advances papers will be open access at no additional cost to the authors.
IEEE Transactions on Magnetics publishes research in science and technology related to the basic physics and engineering of magne-tism, magnetic materials, applied magnetics, magnetic devices, and magnetic data storage. Conference related papers are reviewed to the same high standards as regular submissions to the journal. Details of the journal can be found by visiting http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/xpl/aboutJournal.jsp?punumber=20.
To check the status of their papers, authors should refer to the PXP submission site at http://mmm.peerx-press.org. For all other publica-tions questions, visit the Conference Office in Room 310.
STUDENT TRAVEL SUPPORT
Travel grants are offered to a limited number of students who are pre- senting at the Conference. Students must apply online and the grants are used to offset travel expenses. This program is for students who have not previously received a Conference or IEEE Magnet-ics Society travel grant. Only one application per research group is accepted. Postdoctoral fellows and non-students are not eligible. The recipients for this Conference have already been informed about their selection.
CHILD CARE SUPPORT
Child care grants are offered to a limited number of attendees who are bringing young children to the Conference or who incur extra expenses in leaving their children at home. The recipients for this Conference have already been informed about their selection and are required to submit receipts for their reimbursable expenses.
CONFERENCE ORGANIZATION
PLANNING COMMITTEE
General Chair ....................................Allan MacDonaldSecretary General ..............................Liesl FolksCo-Treasurers ....................................Petru Andrei
Julie BorchersProgram Chair ...................................Mark StilesAssociate Program Chairs .................Leon Balents,
Laura Heyderman, Hideo Ohno
Program Committee Members:
Topic 1: Strongly Correlated Electrons Systems (SCES) • Stephen Julian, Dai Aoki, Federico Becca, Silke Buehler-Paschen, Premi Chandra, Piers Coleman, Hae-Young Kee, Mireille Lavagna, Alessandra Lanzara, Yuji Matsuda, Catherine Pépin, Srinivas Raghu, Qimiao Si, Kai Sun, Joe Thompson, Ashvin Vishwanath, Fa Wang, Steffen Wirth, Huiqiu Yuan
Topic 2: Spin-Systems and Magnetic Structures • Steven May, Christian Batista, Collin Broholm, Gang Chen, Rebecca Flint, Ta-tiana Guidi, Kristjan Haule, Bella Lake, Philippe Mendels, Hatsumi Mori, Masaki Oshikawa, William Ratcliff, Kate Ross, Matthew Stone, Hirokazu Tsunetsugu, Roser Valenti, Andrew Wills, Stephen Wilson, Xiaoshan Xu, Igor Zaliznyak
Topic 3: Spintronics, Magnetization Dynamics, and Micromag-netics • Oksana Chubykalo-Fesenko, Antonio Azevedo, Chris-tian Back, Vincent Baltz, Gerrit Bauer, Sug-Bong Choe, Andrii V. Chumak, Giovanni Finocchio, Pietro Gambardella, Julie Grollier, Masamitsu Hayashi, Axel Hoffmann, Andrew Kent, Alexey Kimel, Hitoshi Kubota, Xinyu Liu, Aurelien Manchon, Eduardo Martínez, Andrzej Maziewski, Hiroshi Naganuma, Junsaku Nitta, Teruo Ono, Masashi Shiraishi, Tom Silva, Yaroslav Tserkovnyak, Maxim Tsoi, Jianhua Zhao
Topic 4: Nanomagnetism • Peter Fischer, Jayasimha Atulasimha, Andris Bakuzis, Jeyadevan Balachandran, Kristen Buchanan, Ever-ett Carpenter, Jose de la Venta, Haifeng Ding, Cindi Dennis, Hans Fangohr, Amalio Fernandez Pacheco, Ioanna Giouroudi, Gerardo Goya, Mitsuteru Inoue, David Lederman, Vitaliy Lomakin, Ferran Macià, Chris Marrows, Stéphane Mangin, Martina Müller, Volker Neu, Vivian Ng, Charudatta Phatak, Francesco Pineider, Dirk Sand-er, Ivan Schuller, Walther Schwarzacher, Ralph Skomski, Robert Stamps, Tom Thomson, Dan Wei, Jürgen Weizenecker, Yizheng Wu
Topic 5: Magnetic Materials and Technologies • Chih-Huang Lai, Elke Arenholz, Eric Fullerton, Donald Gardner, Oliver Gutfleisch, Ravi Hadimani, Atsufumi Hirohata, Kyung-Jin Lee, Yossi Paltiel, Valerie Pierre, Stefania Pizzini, Philip Pong, Bethanie Stadler, Thomas Schrefl, Nian X. Sun, Rie Y. Umetsu, Zhidong Zhang
Publication Co-Chairs .......................Hari Srikanth and Thomas Thomson
Publications Editors ..........................Eun Ah Kim, Chris Binek, Alina Deac, Nicola Morley, Mike Osofsky, Davide Peddis, Monserrat Rivas, Ken-ichi Uchida, Thomas Woodcock
Industry Liaison ................................Tiffany SantosPublicity Chair ..................................Philip Pong Best Student PresentationAwards Co-Chairs .............................Alexander Grutter
and Julia MundyBest Poster PresentationAwards Chair .....................................Barry Zink Student Travel/Child CareGrant Awards Chair ...........................Barry Zink Magnetism as Art Showcase Chair ...Yayoi TakamuraConference Manager .........................Molly BartkowskiAbstracts/Publications Manager .......Regina MohrExhibits Manager ..............................Jennifer Fiske
SPONSORING SOCIETY REPRESENTATIVES
AIP Publishing ..................................Bill BurkeIEEE Magnetics Society ...................Rudolf SchäferIUPAP................................................Burkard Hillebrands
#ICM2018
Be sociable—share! #ICM2018
Follow us on Twitter Like our Facebook page @ICMConf www.facebook.com/ICMConf
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
To join our mailing list, visit www.icm2018sf.org or contact [email protected].
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EXHIBITORS (As of June 1, 2018)
An exhibition of magnetism-related services, equipment, materials, and software will be held at the Moscone Center:
Monday 10:00 am - 11:30 am 1:30 pm - 6:30 pm
Tuesday 10:00 am - 11:30 am 1:30 pm - 6:30 pm
Wednesday 10:00 am - 11:30 am
Thursday 10:00 am - 11:30 am 1:30 pm - 6:30 pm
Booth 19
The American Physical Society (APS) is a nonprofit membership or-ganization that publishes the Physical Review journals, the world’s most widely read physics research and review journals. Through-out 2018, APS is celebrating the 125th anniversary of the Physical Review journals. Please stop by our booth in the exhibit hall to learn more about the prestigious collection of journals.
Contact: Kenneth Newberry Email: [email protected] Website: www.aps.org
Booth 1
attocube is the technology leader for cryogenic measurement instru-mentation, including low vibration closed-cycle cryostats, a cryo-optical table and various low temperature & high magnetic field compatible measurement inserts, allowing for research techniques such as AFM, MFM, SHPM, confocal & RAMAN microscopy. In cooperation with SPECS Zurich, attocube now offers a powerful all-in-one solution for transport measurements. The software integration of the dry cryostat attoDRY2100, a 3D sample rotator and a power-ful measurement electronic (Nanonis Tramea™) combines generic, yet automatable measurement routines with unprecedented speed and signal quality. Nano-precise piezo positioning stages and laser displacement sensors with picometer resolution complete attocube’s portfolio.
Contact: Johanna Kelkile Email: [email protected] Website: www.attocube.com
Booth 11
Cambridge University Press’s publishing in books and journals combines state-of-the-art content with the highest standards of scholarship, writing and production. Visit our stand to browse new titles, available at a 20% discount, and to pick up sample copies of our journals.
Contact: Kamini Ramphal Email: [email protected] Website: www.cambridge.org/academic
Booth 20
Elsevier is a world-leading provider of information solutions designed to enhance the performance of science and technology professionals. Amongst the almost 2,960 journals (most of which of-fer open access options) and 48,300 book titles we publish, no fewer than 100 journals are in Physics or a related field. Visit us at the Elsevier booth and meet our publisher to ask any questions you may have about submitting research to our journals. In addition, learn more about our author services, open access options and content innovation.
Contact: Kinga Rietveld Email: [email protected] Website: www.elsevier.com/physics
Booth 3
Hinds Instruments’ products for Magneto Optic Kerr Effect (MOKE) experiments are the Hysteresis Looper and MOKE kits. The Hysteresis Looper allows the user to plot hysteresis loops and determine coercivity values within the magnetic field range of 0 to 2400 Gauss. The MOKE kit options include photo detectors, lock-in amplifiers, and photoelastic modulators (PEMS) that allow experimenters to build their own MOKE system. A Polar orientation module is available for those working with ultra low-temperature environments. With all options the robustness and convenience of Hinds PEM technology allows sensitive detection of magneto-optic signals produced by thin magnetic films.
Contact: Connie Wimmer Email: [email protected] Website: www.hindsinstruments.com
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Booth 6
IOP Publishing is a society-owned scientific publisher, providing impact, recognition and value for the scientific community. Wholly owned by the UK Institute of Physics, we work closely with re-searchers, academics, and partners worldwide to produce academic journals, ebooks, conference series, and digital products, covering the latest and best research in the physical sciences and beyond.
Contact: Lisa Searle Email: [email protected] Website: www.iop.org
Booth 4
A leading innovator in solutions for measuring materials under controlled magnetic field and temperature conditions, Lake Shore offers electromagnet-based VSMs for characterizing magnetic properties over a 4.2 K to 1273 K temperature range and fields to 3.42 T. Among these: the award-winning 8600 Series VSM, which combines high sensitivity (15 nemu), measurement speed (10 ms/pt), and simple operation in a system capable of characterizing a broad range of materials with unprecedented ease. Also available: magnetic test and measurement instruments, including teslameters/gaussmeters, and cryogenic probe stations with integrated vertical and horizontal field magnets for on-wafer magneto-transport, DC, RF, or microwave measurements.
Contact: Brad Dodrill Email: [email protected] Website: www.lakeshore.com
Booth 2
A fully integrated manufacturer of thin film deposition systems, vac-uum components and materials. Our new High-Power IMPULSE™ Magnetron (HiPIM’s) power supply and TORUS® Mag Keeper magnetron combination delivers films with better adhesion, im-proved grain structure and fewer defects than conventional sputter-ing. This advanced cathode is also available in an ultra-high vacuum version. Lesker’s thin film deposition systems include the improved Pro-Line PVD 75, enhanced for flexibility of layout, deposition, op-eration and expansion. Our eKLipse™ control software makes recipe development and execution easy. Materials for research include: Co, Fe, Ir, Ni, Pt; and alloys and oxides such as Permalloy, BiFeO3, YIG, FeCoMn, MoS2, Fe3O4, and LaSrMnO.
Contact: Bill Zinn Email: [email protected] Website: www.lesker.com
Booth 12
MicroSense is a leading manufacturer of magnetic measurement systems for both research and production quality control. Micro-Sense VSM have the highest Signal to Noise Ratio (SNR) and the highest magnetic field in the smallest footprint of any horizontal field VSM and the largest number of available options including MOKE, FMR, MR, Torque etc. MicroSense also offers a range of non-contact, in-line (full wafer or disk) research and production magnetic metrology systems for in-plane and perpendicular MRAM, hard disk and recording head process control. MicroSense was the first to introduce a 300 mm ready non-contact magnetic property measurement tool for MRAM.
Contact: Erik Samwel Email: [email protected] Website: www.microsense.net
Booth 5
MTI Corporation has been providing a total solution for materials research labs since 1995. MTI supplies ceramic, crystal, metallic substrates from A-Z and Nano-powder. MTI also provides labora-tory R&D equipment including alloy melting, casting, annealing, sectioning, polishing, mixing machines, high temperature muffle and tube furnaces, pressing machines, film coaters, high vacuum systems, high pressure furnaces, RTP furnaces, hydrogen furnaces, as well as compact XRD/XRF for Metallographic analysis and the Amorphous Metallic Material Research Equipment.
Contact: Andy Huang Email: [email protected] Website: www.mtixtl.com
Booth 8
NanoScan is a member of the IonTof group of companies. We are specialized in high-vacuum Scanning Probe Microscopes and our flagship microscope, the VLS-80, offers a high-end standalone solu-tion for high-vacuum SPM. It runs all SPM modes of imaging and is equipped with two phase-locked loops to enable dual frequency modes. Magnetic imaging is a key strength of the VLS-80, with 550 mT out-of-plane, 200 mT in-plane magnetic field options and 10-nm lateral resolution guaranteed; an industry best. The large stage offers excellent positioning repeatability over the complete range of 100mm x 100mm.
Contact: Marco Corbetta Email: [email protected] Website: www.nanoscan.ch
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Booth 10
Oxford Instruments NanoScience designs, supplies and supports market-leading research tools that enable quantum technologies, new materials and device development in the physical sciences. Our tools support research down to the atomic scale through creation of high performance, cryogen free low temperature and magnetic environments, based upon our core technologies in low and ultra-low temperatures, high magnetic fields and system integration, with ever-increasing levels of experimental and measurement readiness. Oxford Instruments NanoScience is a part of the Oxford Instruments plc group.
Contact: Phil Pickering Email: [email protected] Website: www.oxinst.com
Booth 18
Oxford University Press is a publisher of some of the most respected and prestigious books and journals in the world. Visit our stand to browse books and to pick up sample copies of our journals or visit us online.
Contact: Xavier McCutcheon Email: [email protected] Website: www.oup.com
Booth 16
Quantum Design manufactures automated material characteriza-tion systems providing temperatures from 0.05 to 1000 K, magnetic fields up to 16 tesla, and a wide range of measurements, including: magnetometry, electrical transport, heat capacity, thermal transport, Raman spectroscopy, FMR and SPM. Instruments include the the Physical Property Measurement System (PPMS®), SQUID-based Magnetic Property Measurement System (MPMS®3), VersaLab, and PPMS DynaCool. In addition, Quantum Design manufactures helium liquifiers (ATL80, ATL160) recovery systems, and recently introduced an innovative 7 tesla magneto-optical cryostat (Opti-Cool™). They also distribute direct write and nano-lithography sys-tems, NanoMOKE, FMR spectrometers, and single crystal furnaces.
Contact: Melissa Figueroa Email: [email protected] Website: www.qdusa.com
Booth 13
Western Digital is the leader in high capacity hard disk drives for data centers and the inventor of helium sealed HDD technology with more than 27 million units shipped. Western Digital creates environ-ments for data to thrive. The company is driving the innovation needed to help customers capture, preserve, access and transform an ever-increasing diversity of data. Everywhere data lives, from advanced data centers to mobile sensors to personal devices, our industry-leading solutions deliver the possibilities of data. Western Digital® data-centric solutions are marketed under the G-Technolo-gy™, HGST, SanDisk®, Tegile™, Upthere™, and WD® brands.
Contact: Lenny Sharp Email: [email protected] Website: www.wdc.com
CONFERENCE SUPPORTERS
Best Student Presentation Awards
The evico magnetics GmBH was founded in 2006 as a spin-off of the Leibniz Institut for Solid State and Materials Research (IFW) Dresden. The main products are: (i) Advanced magneto-optical wide-field Kerr microscope systems for the visualization of mag-netic domains and magnetization processes in all kinds of magnetic materials. The Kerr microscopes also serve as magneto-optical magnetometers for the sensitive and local measurement of hysteresis loops by MOKE magnetometry. (ii) High Pressure Milling Vials with a gas temperature monitoring system for the synthesis of mag-netic powders and hydrogen storage materials.
Contact: Rudolf Schaefer Email: [email protected] Website: www.evico-magnetics.de
Best Poster Awards
The American Physical Society (APS) Topical Group on Magnetism and its Applications, or GMAG, represents one of the fastest-grow-ing scientific sectors of the APS. Membership in GMAG—an annual investment of only $10 for APS members—not only helps you keep up with the fast-paced field of Magnetism but also provides the fol-lowing features: A convenient way to connect with other members of the magnetism community; the GMAG Newsletter, distributed biannually; and the opportunity to shape the GMAG-sponsored sessions and symposia at the March Meeting, 80 sessions in all for 2016. The Magnetism sorting category received 921 abstracts, which is ~10% of all the abstracts submitted.
Contact: Chris Leighton Email: [email protected] Website: www.aps.org/units/gmag
xviii Exhibitors, Sponsors and Supporters Exhibitors, Sponsors and Supporters xix
General Conference Support
The School of Engineering and Applied Sciences at the University at Buffalo tackles fundamental research and pioneers new technologies that address tough challenges faced by society. Ranked among the top engineering schools in the nation by U.S. News & World Report, we provide an inclusive environment that supports big thinking, creative freedom, and vast possibilities for impact for our faculty, students and alumni.
Website: engineering.buffalo.edu
Basic Energy Sciences (BES) supports fundamental research to understand, predict, and ultimately control matter and energy at the electronic, atomic, and molecular levels in order to provide the foun-dations for new energy technologies and to support DOE missions in energy, environment, and national security. The BES program also plans, constructs, and operates major scientific user facilities to serve researchers from universities, national laboratories, and private institutions. The BES program funds work at more than 160 research institutions through the following three Divisions:• Materials Sciences and Engineering Division• Chemical Sciences, Geosciences, and Biosciences Division• Scientific User Facilities Division
The research disciplines that the BES program supports—condensed matter and materials physics, chemistry, geosciences, and aspects of physical biosciences—are those that discover new materials and de-sign new chemical processes. These disciplines touch virtually every aspect of energy resources, production, conversion, transmission, storage, efficiency, and waste mitigation. BES research provides a knowledge base to help understand, predict, and ultimately control the natural world and serves as an agent of change in achieving the vision of a secure and sustainable energy future.
CONFERENCE SPONSORS
https://publishing.aip.org/
AIP Publishing is a wholly owned not-for-profit subsidiary of the American Institute of Physics (AIP). AIP Publishing’s mission is to support the charitable, scientific and educational purposes of AIP through scholarly publishing activities in the fields of the physical and related sciences on its own behalf, on behalf of Member Societ-ies of AIP, and on behalf of other publishing partners to help them proactively advance their missions. Those invited and contributed papers presented at ICM 2018 in sessions which have been assigned to AIP Advances, will be published in the fully open access journal. AIP Advances is a peer reviewed journal covering all the areas of the physical sciences (experimental, theoretical, and applied), making it a good fit for the range of research on magnetism and magnetic materials now being presented at the MMM Conference.
www.ieeemagnetics.org/
The IEEE Magnetics Society is the leading international profession-al organization for magnetism and related professionals throughout the world. The IEEE Magnetics Society promotes the advancement of science, technology, applications and training in magnetism. It fosters presentation and exchange of information among its mem-bers and within the global technical community, including education and training of young engineers and scientists. It seeks to nurture positive interactions between all national and regional societies act-ing in the field of magnetism.
http://iupap.org/
The International Union of Pure and Applied Physics (IUPAP) was founded in 1922 with the mission to assist in the worldwide development of physics, foster international cooperation in physics, and help in the application of physics toward solving problems of concern to humanity. The Commission on Magnetism (C9) was established by IUPAP in 1957 to promote the exchange of informa-tion and views among the members of the international scientific community in the general field of Magnetism. The Commission facilitates the organization of the International Conference on Mag-netism (ICM), organizes awards to recognize outstanding scientists, and promotes free circulation of scientists, among other activities.
xx Program-at-a-Glance Program-at-a-Glance xxi
CONFERENCE PROGRAM-AT-A-GLANCESUNDAY, JULY 15, 2018
1:30 pm - 5:00 pm
WS Workshop: Computational Micromagnetics with JOOMMF Room 307/308
1:30 pm - 3:00 pm
T1 Entrepreneurship Tutorial Room 1043:30 pm - 5:00 pm
T2 Resume Writing Tutorial Room 104MONDAY, JULY 16, 2018
8:00 am - 10:00 am
AA Néel Medal Award, IUPAP Young Scientists Awards, & Prize Talks Esplanade Ballroom
10:00 am - 11:30 am • Poster Sessions San Francisco Ballroom
B1 Antiferromagnetic Spintronics I
B2 Biomedical and Non-Biomedical Applications I
B3 CPP-GMR and Magnetic Tunnel Junctions I
B4 Spin Caloritronics I
B5 Low Temperature Measurements and Modelling
B6 Magnetic Device for Information Storage and Processing
B7 Magnetophotonics and Magnetoplasmonics I
B8 Magnon Waveguides and Devices I
B9 Materials for Energy Applications I
B10 Molecular Magnetism I
B11 Theory of Strongly Correlated Electron Systems I
B12 Quantum Spin Liquids I
B13 Rare Earth Free Permanent Magnets I
B14 Frustrated Magnetism, Including Dimers, Kitaev Models, and Shastry-Sutherland and Honeycomb Lattices
B15 Ordered Phases in SCES 1: Mostly Magnetism
B16 Topological SCES I: Magnetic Systems11:30 am - 12:30 pm • Oral Sessions
C1 Electric Field Effects on Magnetic Systems Esplanade 157
C2 Molecular Magnetism II Esplanade 158
C3 Magnetic Recording Esplanade 159
C4 Domain Wall Dynamics I Esplanade 160
C5 Functional Materials Esplanade 152
C6 Diagnostic Biomedical Applications of MNPs Room 105
C7 Advanced Synthesis of Magnetic Thin Films and Multilayers I Room 104
C8 Ultrafast Spectroscopy of Strongly Correlated Systems Room 306
C9 New Developments in Strongly Correlated Electron Systems I Room 307/308
C10 Quantum Spin Liquids II: Theory and Applications to Materials Room 313/314
1:30 pm - 3:00 pm • Oral Sessions
D1 Spin Currents and Magnonic Condensates in Magnetic Insulators Esplanade 157
D2 Magnetic Skyrmions and Spin Textures Esplanade 158
D3 Magnetic Molecules and Organics for Bio-applications of Magnetism Esplanade 159
D4 Spin Ices and Magnetic Nanoparticles I Esplanade 160
D5 Rare Earth Free Permanent Magnets II Esplanade 152
D6 Magnetic Semiconductors I Room 105
D7 Tunnel Junctions and Spin-Torque Nano-Oscillators Room 104
D8 Unconventional Superconductivity of Sr2RuO4 Room 306
D9 Electronic Structure of Heavy Fermion Systems; Properties of URu2Si2 Room 307/308
D10 Anisotropic Spin-1/2 Chains Room 313/3143:30 pm - 5:00 pm • Oral Sessions
E1 Spin-charge Conversion and Spin-orbit Torque I Esplanade 157
E2 Heterostructrues and Spin-based Devices Esplanade 158
E3 Imaging Magnetic Textures I Esplanade 159
E4 Magnon Waveguides and Devices II Esplanade 160
E5 Magnetocaloric Materials I Esplanade 152
E6 Therapeutic Biomedical Applications of MNPs Room 105
E7 Magnetophotonics and Magnetoplasmonics II Room 104
E8 Theory of Strongly Correlated Electron Systems II Room 306
E9 Quantum Critical Phenomena Room 307/308
E10 B-spinels, Kagome and Triangular Related Lattices Room 313/314
5:00 pm - 6:30 pm • Poster Sessions San Francisco Ballroom
F1 Antiferromagnetic Spintronics II
F2 Biomedical and Non-Biomedical Applications II
F3 Heavy Fermions I: Heavy Fermions and Other Novel Phases
F4 Magnetic Imaging and Associated Techniques
F5 Magnetic Semiconductors II
F6 Magnetic Tunnel Junctions I
F7 Magnetocaloric and Frustrated Systems
F8 Magnetocaloric Materials II
F9 Quasi 1D Magnetism
F10 Soft Magnetic Materials and Magnetic Shielding I
F11 Spin Ices and Magnetic Nanoparticles II
F12 Spin Structures and Transport Properties I
F13 Spin-charge Conversion and Spin-orbit Torque II
F14 Superconducting SCES I: Topological Superconductors
F15 Topological SCES II: Theory
xxii Program-at-a-Glance Program-at-a-Glance xxiii
TUESDAY, JULY 17, 20188:30 am - 10:00 am • Oral Sessions
G1 Magnon Transduction Esplanade 157
G2 Multiferroic Magneto-optics Esplanade 158
G3 Soft Magnetic Materials and Magnetic Shielding II Esplanade 159
G4 Advances with Nanoparticles I Esplanade 160
G5 Magnetocaloric Materials III Esplanade 152
G6 Antiferromagnetic Spintronics: Theory Room 105
G7 Electric Field Control of Magnetic Systems Room 104
G8 Quantum Spin Liquids III Room 306
G9 Superconductivity in Ferromagnetic Heavy Fermion Systems Room 307/308
G10 Spin-1 Chains and Frustrated Spin-1/2 Chains Room 313/31410:00 am - 11:30 am • Poster Sessions San Francisco Ballroom
H1 Advances with Nanoparticles II
H2 Anisotropy in Magnetic Thin Films
H3 Frustrated 1D Magnets, Spin-ladders and S=1 Chains
H4 Hard Magnetic Films
H5 Heavy Fermions II: Ferromagnetic and Metamagnetic Systems
H6 Magnetocaloric Materials IV
H7 Ordered Phases in SCES II: Magnetism and Other
H8 Quantum Spin Liquids IV
H9 Soft Magnetic Materials and Magnetic Shielding III
H10 Spin Magnetoresistance I
H11 Spin-charge Conversion and Spin-orbit Torque III
H12 Spin-orbit, Kondo & Heavy Fermion Magnetism
H13 Superconducting SCES II: Heavy Fermion Superconductors
H14 Superconducting SCES III: Novel Materials
H15 Theory and Simulation of Magnetic Systems I
H16 Ultrafast Magnetism and THz Spintronics I11:30 am - 12:30 pm
I1 Plenary I: Spin-Orbit Torques: Discoveries, Advances and Possibilities Esplanade Ballroom
1:30 pm - 3:00 pm • Oral Sessions
J1 Computing with Spintronic Devices Esplanade 157
J2 Molecular Magnetism III Esplanade 158
J3 Quantum Spin Liquids VI: Kagome and Triangular Systems Esplanade 159
J4 Advances with Nanoparticles III Esplanade 160
J5 Magnetocaloric Materials V Esplanade 152
J6 Vortex and Skyrmion Dynamics I Room 105
J7 Semiconductor and Organic Spintronics I Room 104
J8 Heavy Fermions III: Novel Results from High Field Measurement Room 306
J9 Superconductivity and Quantum Criticality Room 307/308
J10 Quantum Spin Liquids V: Kitaev Spin Liquids Room 313/314
3:30 pm - 5:00 pm • Oral Sessions
K1 Spin Pumping Esplanade 157
K2 Thin Films, Surfaces and Heterostructures Esplanade 158
K3 Imaging Magnetic Textures II Esplanade 159
K4 Magnetoresistance and Hall Effects Esplanade 160
K5 Materials for Energy Applications II Esplanade 152
K6 Spin Ices and Magnetic Nanoparticles III Room 105
K7 Theory and Modelling of Nanomagnets I Room 104
K8 Topological Semimetals in Kondo Systems Room 306
K9 Superconductivity in 115’s and Other Heavy Fermion Systems Room 307/308
K10 Dimers in Frustrated Magnets: Shastry-Sutherland Lattices and Beyond Room 313/314
5:00 pm - 6:30 pm • Poster Sessions San Francisco Ballroom
L1 Advances with Nanoparticles IV
L2 Anisotropy Engineering of Magnetic Thin Films and Multilayers I
L3 Bulk Device Measurements and Designs
L4 Chirality, Criticality and Other Features
L5 Heavy Fermions IV: Novel Materials
L6 Magnetic Semiconductors III
L7 Magnetocaloric Materials VI
L8 Magnon Spintronics and Condensates
L9 Spin-Torque Nano-Oscillators
L10 Quantum Spin Liquids VII
L11 Skyrmions I
L12 Spin Structures and Transport Properties II
L13 New Magnetic Materials I
L14 Superconducting SCES IV: Novel Materials
L15 Topological SCES III: TM Pnictides and Chalcogenides
L16 Two Dimensional Frustrated Lattices
WEDNESDAY, JULY 18, 20188:30 am - 10:00 am • Oral Sessions
M1 Spin Diffusion and Relaxation Esplanade 157
M2 Functional Multiferroics I Esplanade 158
M3 New Sensors and New Probes Esplanade 159
M4 Magnetic Configuration and Application of Nanowires and Nanotubes Esplanade 160
M5 Rare Earth Transition Metal Permanent Magnets I Esplanade 152
M6 Domain Wall Dynamics II Room 105
M7 Spin Caloritronics II Room 104
M8 Mott Insulator-to-metal Transition Room 306
M9 Unconventional Superconductors Room 307/308
M10 Pyrochlores and Magnetic Fragmentation Room 313/314
xxiv Program-at-a-Glance Program-at-a-Glance xxv
WEDNESDAY, JULY 18, 2018 (Continued)10:00 am - 11:30 am • Poster Sessions San Francisco Ballroom
N1 Cylindrical Nanostructures: Properties and Applications
N2 Electric Field Effects and Magnetic Switching I
N3 Kondo Insulators, Kondo Semimetals, Doped Graphene
N4 Magnon Bandstructure Engineering
N5 New Magnetic Materials II
N6 Quantum and Low-Dimensional Magnetism I
N7 Quantum Critical SCES I: Oxides, Thin Films, Mott Transition
N8 Rare Earth Transition Metal Permanent Magnets II
N9 Soft Magnetic Materials and Magnetic Shielding IV
N10 Spin Magnetoresistance II
N11 Superconducting SCES V: Heavy Fermion Superconductors II
N12 Theory and Modelling of Nanostructures II
N13 Theory and Simulation of Magnetic Systems II
N14 Thin Film and Hybrid Nanostructures I
N15 Three Dimensional Frustrated Lattices
N16 Topological SCES IV: TM Pnictides, Chalcogenides and Related
N17 Ultrafast Magnetism and THz Spintronics II11:30 am - 12:30 pm
O1 Plenary II: Antiferromagnetic Spintronics Esplanade BallroomTHURSDAY, JULY 19, 2018
8:30 am - 10:00 am • Oral Sessions
P1 Skyrmions II: Thin Films Esplanade 157
P2 Functional Multiferroics II Esplanade 158
P3 Soft Magnetic Materials and Magnetic Shielding V Esplanade 159
P4 Spin-charge Conversion and Spin-orbit Torque IV Esplanade 160
P5 Rare Earth Transition Metal Permanent Magnets III Esplanade 152
P6 Exchange Bias and Exchange Springs I Room 105
P7 Surface and Interface Effects I Room 104
P8 Frustration and Quantum Phase Transitions in Heavy Fermions and Beyond Room 306
P9 Topological Insulators in Strongly Correlated Matter Room 307/308
P10 Frustrated Magnetism Room 313/31410:00 am - 11:30 am • Poster Sessions San Francisco Ballroom
Q1 Domain Wall Dynamics III
Q2 Ferromagnetic Resonance and Magnon Hybridization
Q3 Itinerant Magnetism I
Q4 Magnetoelastic and Magnetomechanical I
Q5 Multiferroics I
Q6 New Developments in SCES: Materials
Q7 New Magnetic Materials III
Q8 Novel Applications of Magnetic Thin Films and Multilayers I
Q9 Permanent Magnets in the ThMn12 Structure
Q10 Quantum Critical SCES II: Other Systems
Q11 Soft Magnetic Materials and Magnetic Shielding VI
Q12 Spin Structures and Transport Properties III
Q13 Spin-charge Conversion and Spin-orbit Torque V
Q14 Surface and Interface Effects II
Q15 Theory and Modelling of Nanostructures III
Q16 Topological SCES V: Topological Kondo Systems11:30 am - 12:30 pm
R1 Plenary III: Topological Weyl Magnets: From Multipole to Room Temperature Functions Esplanade Ballroom
1:30 pm - 3:00 pm • Oral Sessions
S1 New Routes and Materials Toward Quantum Criticality Esplanade 157
S2 Multiferroic and Functional Materials I Esplanade 158
S3 New Magnetic Materials IV Esplanade 159
S4 Anisotropy Engineering of Magnetic Thin Films and Multilayers II Esplanade 160
S5 Magnetoelastic and Magnetomechanical II Esplanade 152
S6 Domain Wall Dynamics IV Room 105
S7 Ultrafast Magnetism and THz Spintronics III Room 104
S8 Non-centro-symmetric Superconductors Room 306
S9 Topological States in Transition Metal and Organic Systems Room 307/308
S10 Theory and Simulation of Magnetic Systems III Room 313/314
3:30 pm - 5:00 pm • Oral Sessions
T1 Magnon Waveguides and Devices III Esplanade 157
T2 Anomalous Hall Effect and Itinerant Magnets Esplanade 158
T3 New Instruments and New Techniques Esplanade 159
T4 Topological Insulators and Spin-magnetoresistance Esplanade 160
T5 New Magnetic Materials V Esplanade 152
T6 Novel Applications of Magnetic Thin Films and Multilayers II Room 105
T7 Surface and Interface Effects III Room 104
T8 Iron Superconductors: Nematicity and Superconductivity Room 306
T9 Heavy Fermions V: Experiment and Theory Room 307/308
T10 Magnetism of 4d/5d and Spin-Orbital Systems Room 313/3145:00 pm - 6:30 pm • Poster Sessions San Francisco Ballroom
U1 Domain Wall Dynamics V
U2 Electric Field Effects and Magnetic Switching II
U3 Exchange Bias and Exchange Springs II
U4 Surface and Interface Effects IV
U5 Magnetic Tunnel Junctions II
U6 Magnetoelastic and Magnetomechanical III
U7 Multiferroic and Functional Materials II
xxvi Program-at-a-Glance Program-at-a-Glance xxvii
THURSDAY, JULY 19, 2018 (Continued)5:00 pm - 6:30 pm • Poster Sessions San Francisco Ballroom
U8 Multiferroics II
U9 Novel Applications of Magnetic Thin Films and Multilayers III
U10 New Magnetic Measurement Methods
U11 Multipolar SCES 1: 1-2-20 Materials
U12 Quantum Critical SCES III: Heavy fermion and TM compounds
U13 Superconducting SCES VI: FeSe and Other Iron-based Superconductors
U14 Heavy Fermions VI: Theory and Experiment
U15 Thin Films, Nano- & Heterostructures
U16 Vortex and Skyrmion Dynamics IIFRIDAY, JULY 20, 2018
8:30 am - 10:00 am • Oral Sessions
V1 CPP-GMR and Magnetic Tunnel Junctions II Esplanade 157
V2 Novel Multiferroics Esplanade 158
V3 MRAM Esplanade 159
V4 Thin Film and Hybrid Nanostructures II Esplanade 160
V5 New Magnetic Materials VI Esplanade 152
V6 Magnetic Semiconductors IV Room 105
V7 Ultrafast Magnetism and THz Spintronics IV Room 104
V8 Non-equilibrium Phenomena in Strongly Correlated Systems Room 306
V9 Stripes, Magnetism, and High Temperature Superconductivity Room 307/308
V10 Quantum and Low-Dimensional Magnetism II Room 313/31410:00 am - 11:30 am • Poster Sessions San Francisco Ballroom
W1 3D Printing and Applications of Permanent Magnets
W2 Advanced Synthesis of Magnetic Thin Films and Multilayers II
W3 Exchange Bias and Exchange Springs III
W4 Magnetic Structures and Magnetic Phase Diagrams
W5 Multiferroics III
W6 Multipolar SCES 2: Other Materials, Mostly Heavy Fermion
W7 Non-equilibrium Strongly Correlated Electron Systems
W8 Semiconductor and Organic Spintronics II
W9 Skyrmions III
W10 Soft Magnetic Materials and Magnetic Shielding VII
W11 Spin Structures and Transport Properties IV
W12 Spin Transport, Relaxation and Diffusion
W13 Superconducting SCES VII: Cuprates
W14 Superconducting SCES VIII: 122 Iron-based Superconductors
W15 Surface and Interface Effects V11:30 am - 12:30 pm
X1 Plenary IV: Hidden Magnetic Order in Multiferroics and Superconductors Esplanade Ballroom
1:30 pm - 3:00 pm • Oral Sessions
Y1 Emerging Phenomena in Van der Waals Magnets Esplanade 157
Y2 Theory and Simulation of Magnetic Systems IV Esplanade 158
Y4 Thin Film and Hybrid Nanostructures III Esplanade 160
Y5 First Principle Simulation of Hard Magnetic Properties Esplanade 152
Y6 Antiferromagnetic Spintronics: Experiment Room 105
Y7 Voltage Controlled Magnetic Dynamics Room 104
Y8 New Developments in Strongly Correlated Electron Systems II Room 306
Y9 Heavy Fermions VII: Multipolar Materials Room 307/308
Y10 Magnetism and Topological Phases Room 313/3143:30 pm - 5:00 pm • Oral Sessions
Z1 Skyrmions IV: Bulk Materials Esplanade 157
Z2 Novel Magnetic Structures and Materials Esplanade 158
Z4 Spin-charge Conversion and Spin-orbit Torque VI Esplanade 160
Z5 New Magnetic Materials VII Esplanade 152
Z6 Exchange Bias and Exchange Springs IV Room 105
Z7 Surface and Interface Effects VI Room 104
Z8 Strange Metal, Underdoped Cuprates, Superconducting Interfaces Room 306
Z9 Heavy Fermions VIII: Novel Experiments Room 307/308
Z10 Itinerant Magnetism II Room 313/3145:00 pm - 5:30 pm
ZZ Closing Esplanade 152
MONDAY ESPLANADE BALLROOMMORNING8:00
Session AA2018 IUPAP MAGNETISM AWARD AND NÉEL MEDAL AWARD CEREMONY & PRIZE TALKS
Burkard Hillebrands, Co-ChairTU Kaiserslautern, Kaiserslautern, Germany
Kai Liu, Co-ChairUniversity of California, Davis, Davis, CA, United States
Allan MacDonald, Co-ChairUniversity of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX, United States
8:00
Welcome
Presentation of 2018 IUPAP Magnetism Award and Néel Medal
Presentation of 2016, 2017, and 2018 IUPAP Young Scientist Prizes in the field of Magnetism
AA-01. The Marriage of Ferromagnetism and Superconductivity: A New Twist. (Invited) S.D. Bader1 1. Argonne National Laboratory, Bridgman, MI, United States
AA-02. Electric Field Control of Magnetism. (Invited) R. Ramesh1 1. Physics / MSE, UC Berkeley, Berkeley, CA, United States
AA-03. Topology in Spintronics: Majorana, etc. (Invited) K. Wang1 1. Departments of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Materials Science and Engineering, Physics and Astronomy, UCLA, Los Angeles, CA, United States
MONDAY SAN FRANCISCO BALLROOMMORNING10:00
Session B1ANTIFERROMAGNETIC SPINTRONICS I
(Poster Session)Vincent Baltz, Chair
SPINTEC, Grenoble, France
B1-01. Withdrawn
Monday 1xxviii Notes